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First published online November 19, 2004; 10.1104/pp.104.053587 Plant Physiology 136:4061-4071 (2004) © 2004 American Society of Plant Biologists Functional Analysis of Methylthioribose Kinase Genes in Plants1Botanisches Institut, Universität Kiel, 24098 Kiel, Germany (M.S., S.B., G.R.); and Department of Chemistry, Boise State University, Boise, Idaho 837251520 (K.A.C.)
Through a biochemical and a genetic approach, we have identified several plant genes encoding methylthioribose (MTR) kinase, an enzyme involved in recycling of methionine through the methylthioadenosine (MTA) cycle. OsMTK1, an MTR kinase from rice (Oryza sativa), is 48.6 kD in size and shows cooperative kinetics with a Vmax of 4.9 pmol/min and a K0.5 of 16.8 µM. MTR kinase genes are the first genes to be identified from the MTA cycle in plants. Insertional mutagenesis of the unique AtMTK gene in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) resulted in an inability of plants to grow on MTA as a supplemental sulfur source. MTK knock-out plants were not impaired in growth under standard conditions, indicating that the MTA cycle is a nonessential metabolic pathway in Arabidopsis when sulfur levels are replete. In rice, OsMTK genes were strongly up-regulated in shoots and roots when plants were exposed to sulfur starvation. Gene expression was largely unaffected by lack of nitrogen or iron in the nutrient solution, indicating that OsMTK regulation was linked specifically to sulfur metabolism.
Met is a sulfur-containing amino acid that can be activated by ATP to S-adenosyl-Met (AdoMet). AdoMet serves as a substrate in many biochemical reactions. When AdoMet is utilized for the synthesis of ethylene, certain polyamines, and siderophores, methylthioadenosine (MTA) is produced as a by-product. MTA can be recycled to Met, thus allowing high rates of ethylene, polyamine, or siderophore synthesis without net consumption of Met. This Met salvage pathway has been characterized and was described in plants at the biochemical level in the 1970s and 1980s (Wang et al., 1982
In bacteria and in plants, MTA is depurinated to 5-methylthioribose (MTR) through the enzymatic activity of MTA nucleosidase. MTR kinase catalyzes the subsequent phosphorylation of the C-1 hydroxyl group of the Rib moiety of MTR to yield 5-methylthio-Rib-1-P. In animals, MTA phosphorylase carries out both functions in a single ATP-independent step (Schlenk, 1983
Bacterial MTR kinases have been partially purified from Enterobacter aerogenes (Ferro et al., 1978
MTR Kinases Are Encoded by Unique Genes in Most Plants With the amino acid sequence of MTR kinase from K. pneumoniae as query (Fig. 1; accession no. AF212863) BLAST searches were performed in the translated rice (Oryza sativa) genomic database. Two sequences were found that showed 34%/60% and 33%/60% identity/similarity to Klebsiella MTR kinase. The proteins were termed OsMTK1 and OsMTK2. OsMTK1 and OsMTK2 genes are located in tandem on chromosome 4 and encompass nucleotides 103,839 to 100,698 (OsMTK1) and nucleotides 109,551 to 106,919 (OsMTK2) of the rice genomic BAC sequence OSJNBa0043A12. Through comparison with rice expressed sequence tag (EST) sequences found in the National Center for Biotechnology Information BLAST EST database, the genes were annotated and an open reading frame was identified for each gene consisting of 1,293 nucleotides encoding 431 amino acids for OsMTK1 (accession no. AY593959) and of 1,278 nucleotides encoding 426 amino acids in the case of OsMTK2 (accession no. CAE02820). The deduced polypeptides had a molecular mass of 48,600 D and 48,200 D, respectively. The two OsMTK proteins showed 95% overall identity to each other (Fig. 1). Further sequence comparison revealed that intron sequences of OsMTK1 and OsMTK2 were more than 60% identical.
An Arabidopsis MTR kinase homolog was identified on chromosome 1, where it is encoded by the gene At1g49820. The deduced protein had 71% identical and 86% similar amino acids to OsMTK1 (Fig. 1). Arabidopsis has only one copy of the MTR kinase gene, which we termed AtMTK. In EST databases, open reading frames with high similarity to rice MTK were identified from orange (Citrus sinensis), tobacco (Nicotiana benthamiana), tomato, potato (Solanum tuberosum), soybean (Glycine max), Vitis vinifera, Medicago truncatula, barley (Hordeum vulgare), wheat (Triticum aestivum), maize (Zea mays), onion (Allium cepa), Sorghum bicolor, and Saccharum officinarum, but no homologs were found in animals or yeast. This result is consistent with the fact that, in animals, MTA recycling does not involve hydrolysis of MTA to MTR by MTA nucleosidase and subsequent phosphorylation of MTR by MTR kinase as in plants and in bacteria. Instead, MTA is phosphorylated and cleaved to methylthio-Rib-1-P and adenine in one step by the enzyme 5'-deoxy-5'-methylthioadenosine phosphorylase (Schlenk, 1983 For many plant species, more than one MTK EST was found. However, these EST sequences were redundant, encoding identical amino acid sequences for each species. With the exception of two soybean partial cDNAs (97.2% identical) and six ESTs from hexaploid wheat (93% or more identical), all ESTs from one species were identical at the nucleotide level, strongly supporting the idea that in most plants a single-copy gene encodes MTR kinase. The sequence differences found at the nucleic acid level in ESTs from soybean and wheat might represent genotypic variance. Rice is an exception to that general observation in that it possesses two MTK genes. The two genes from rice are highly conserved not only with respect to the encoded proteins, as described, but also with respect to intron/exon structure (data not shown). Furthermore, they share 60% overall identity in intron sequences (data not shown). Taken together with the fact that OsMTK1 and OsMTK2 are located in tandem on the genome, we suggest that they have evolved only recently through gene duplication. Most ESTs identified from rice were identical to the corresponding OsMTK1 sequence, indicating that OsMTK1 was more abundantly expressed than OsMTK2. In the remaining EST sequences, it was not possible to decide if they derived from OsMTK1 or OsMTK2, as these were more than 95% identical at the nucleic acid level.
Database searches performed in the BLAST conserved-domain database (Marchler-Bauer et al., 2003
Recombinant OsMTK1 protein from rice was overexpressed in Escherichia coli and purified by GSH-affinity chromatography to study enzyme activity. The specific activity was determined to be 19.4 nmol min1 mg of enzyme1. This activity is much lower (approximately 3- to 30-fold less) than that found for B. subtilis and K. pneumoniae MTR kinases. Several factors could account for this lower specific activity: it may represent innate activity characteristics specific to OsMTK1, or be due to effects arising from the fusion protein engineering scheme that in turn affected enzyme activity. A plot of substrate versus velocity yielded a sigmoidal-shaped rather than a parabolic curve that suggested cooperative enzyme kinetics (Fig. 2). Kinetic constants were calculated from nonlinear regression analysis of substrate-velocity data using the equation: Vo = Vmax/[1 + (S/K0.5)n]. Curve fitting was accomplished by sums of squares minimization of residual differences (least-squares fitting; Bowen and Jorman, 1995
OsMTK Expression Is Not Induced in Submerged Deepwater Rice
AdoMet is a precursor of ethylene biosynthesis. AdoMet is converted to 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC) by ACC synthase (ACS) producing MTA as a by-product. Thus, the MTA cycle is directly linked to ethylene synthesis in plants. In deepwater rice, submergence triggers ethylene formation in the youngest internode (Stünzi and Kende, 1989
OsMTK Is Up-Regulated under Sulfur-Limiting Conditions MTA is a sulfur-containing compound. The thio group contained in MTA is salvaged through the MTA cycle. Many genes involved in sulfur metabolism have been shown to be up-regulated when sulfur becomes limiting. To investigate if regulation of OsMTK genes was linked to sulfur metabolism, we subjected rice plants to sulfur shortage. As controls, we included treatment of plants without nitrogen or without iron in the nutrient solution. Phenotypic analysis indicated that 3 weeks of starvation caused reduced shoot growth and chlorosis in plants grown without nitrogen (Fig. 4A). No phenotypic changes were observed in shoots after starvation with Fe2+ or when plants were starved for sulfur as compared to plants supplied with a complete nutrient solution (Fig. 4A).
Following starvation treatment, OsMTK mRNA levels were measured in shoots and roots from plants subjected to one of the four treatments (complete, sulfur deficient, nitrogen deficient, iron deficient). A low level of expression was observed in both roots and shoots, with slightly higher mRNA levels in shoots when plants were supplied with sufficient mineral nutrients (Fig. 4B). Regulation through an altered mineral supply was observed in iron-, sulfur-, and nitrogen-deficient medium, albeit to very different degrees. Omission of iron or nitrogen from the nutrient solution resulted in slight down-regulation of OsMTK expression. Very high gene induction was observed in sulfur-deficient plants. Specific up-regulation of OsMTK expression in response to sulfur deficiency provided a regulatory link between the MTA cycle and general sulfur metabolism. Analysis of sulfur-containing amino acids in shoots and roots of the same plants that were used for northern-blot analysis indicated that Met levels were lower in plants grown in Fe2+-deficient, sulfur-deficient, and nitrogen-deficient media as compared to plants grown with a complete mineral nutrient supply, indicating that Met is not the direct signal that triggers OsMTK gene regulation in rice (data not shown). In yeast, AdoMet has been shown to be the crucial metabolite for regulation of the sulfur network (Thomas and Surdin-Kerjan, 1997
Knockout mutants of Arabidopsis were used as a genetic tool to study MTR kinase gene function. Arabidopsis has one assigned MTR kinase gene (Fig. 1), for which we identified two T-DNA insertion mutants in the Sequence-Indexed Library of Insertion Mutations in the Arabidopsis Genome collection at the Salk Institute (La Jolla, CA) designated line 532,926 and line 633,954. These were obtained and insertion of the T-DNA in AtMTK was verified through PCR analysis. Line 532,926 harbored an insertion in the promoter or 5' untranslated region of AtMTK, whereas line 633,954 harbored an insertion between exons 5 and 6 (Fig. 5A). Homozygous plants from each line were selected to study transcription of AtMTK in the T-DNA insertion lines. Transcript levels were compared in wild-type and mutant plants using reverse transcription (RT)-PCR. RT-PCR with primers AtMTK-R3 and AtMTK-F3 (Table I) were expected to amplify a fragment of 1,314 bp from full-length AtMTK cDNA (Fig. 5B). Amplification from wild-type cDNA produced a 1.3-kb fragment (Fig. 4C). The same size fragment was amplified from line 532,926, whereas no product was obtained for line 633,954 (Fig. 5C). This finding suggested that T-DNA insertion in the 5' untranslated or promoter region of AtMTK of line 532,926 did not affect gene transcription. On the other hand, insertion in intron 5 of AtMTK prevented synthesis of a full transcript in line 633,954.
To analyze if a truncated mRNA of AtMTK was present in line 633,954, RT-PCR with primers AtMTK-R1 and AtMTK-F3 (Table I) was performed. It was expected to produce a DNA fragment 515 bp in size (Fig. 5B). In wild type and in both T-DNA-tagged lines, a product of approximately 500 bp was obtained (Fig. 5C). However, the amount of amplified product was much lower for line 633,954 than in wild type or line 532,926, possibly due to degradation of the truncated mRNA produced in line 633,954. The results indicated that mutant line 633,954 was knocked out for expression of intact AtMTK mRNA. We therefore refer to line 633,954 plants as knock-out mutant. In line 532,926 AtMTK transcription did not appear to be affected.
Growth and development of wild-type and knock-out mutant plants were observed under normal growth conditions. Throughout the life cycle, no phenotypic differences were obvious between wild type and mutant (Fig. 6; data not shown), indicating that expression of AtMTK was not required for normal plant development under sulfur-replete conditions. Since MTK function relates to sulfur metabolism, we studied seedling and plant development under sulfur-limiting conditions. Arabidopsis seeds from wild-type, AtMTK knock-out line 633,954, and insertion line 532,926 plants were placed on different media with or without sulfur supplemented as SO42, Met, or MTA at different concentrations. Plants grown on complete medium served as a positive control, whereas plants grown on medium deficient in sulfur were used as a negative control. Morphological differences between nutrient-starved and supplemented plants first became visible after 10 to 12 d (data not shown). Effects on shoot growth were assayed after 3 weeks.
Plants from all three lines showed severe growth retardation when placed for 3 weeks on media without a sulfur source (Figs. 6, A and B, and 7). No differences between mutants and wild type were observed under these conditions, which caused arrested growth and induced reddish coloring of shoots that was attributed to stress-induced anthocyanin production (Fig. 6B). Supplementing sulfur-deficient media with SO42 resulted in a dose-dependent recovery of shoot growth that was comparable in wild type and both mutant lines (Figs. 6C and 7A). While 5 µM SO42 was not sufficient to alleviate growth retardation, addition of 50 µM SO42 and 500 µM SO42 led to partial and complete recovery of shoot growth, respectively (Figs. 6, A and C, and 7A). Supplementation with Met was sufficient to partially restore growth (Figs. 6, A and D, and 7B). However, even at 500 µM Met, shoot fresh weight was restored to only about two-thirds of that obtained with complete media or with 500 µM SO42 as sulfur source (Fig. 7B). Again, no differences in growth response were observed between mutant and wild-type plants.
In order to see if plants were capable of utilizing MTA as sulfur source, we supplemented sulfur-deficient media with MTA. Wild-type and mutant plants grown on plates containing 5 µM or 50 µM MTA showed no significant increase in fresh weight (Fig. 7C). With 500 µM MTA added to sulfur-deficient media, wild-type plants and plants from insertion line 532,926 showed partial recovery of shoot growth (Figs. 6, A, B, and E, and 7C). By contrast, plants of the knock-out mutant line 633,954 did not grow on 500 µM MTA (Figs. 6, A, B, and E, and 7C). Their shoot fresh weight was comparable to that of plants grown without sulfur. After 3 weeks of growth on 500 µM MTA, wild-type plants and plants from the ineffectual insertion mutant line 532,926 were twice as big as plants of the MTR kinase knock-out mutant. The difference in fresh weight of wild-type and knock-out mutant plants grown on 500 µM MTA was statistically significant at a P < 0.001 (F = 45.24, degrees of freedom = 1.94) according to ANOVA.
In plants, MTA is generated from AdoMet as a by-product of ethylene, polyamine, and siderophore biosynthesis. It is recycled to Met in a biochemical pathway termed the MTA cycle (Miyazaki and Yang, 1987
Homology at the amino acid level between bacterial and plant sequences was 30% to 35%, which was sufficient to identify putative plant MTK homologs. Recombinant rice OsMTK1 protein was used to study enzyme activity. OsMTK1 displayed kinase activity with an affinity toward MTR as substrate of 16.8 µM, which was comparable to the K0.5 of 12.2 µM described previously for the bacterial enzyme (Cornell et al., 1996 Functional identification of MTK as an MTA cycle enzyme-encoding gene was further achieved in Arabidopsis through a molecular genetic approach. Insertional mutagenesis of the unique MTK gene in Arabidopsis eliminated synthesis of full-length AtMTK transcripts and resulted in an inability to utilize MTA as sulfur source. Since utilization of sulfate and Met as sulfur supplements were not impaired in the mutant, the mutation can be assigned specifically to the MTA metabolism. The possibility exists that the mutation resulted in an inability of the plant to take up MTA. However, since biochemical analysis identified OsMTK1 as true MTR kinase, it is more likely that knock out of the Arabidopsis homolog impaired turnover of the MTA derivative MTR in the MTA cycle. Since AtMTK is a unique gene, we consider its knock out in Arabidopsis as MTA cycle knock out. Despite elimination of the ability to utilize MTA as a sulfur source, AtMTK knock-out plants did not display phenotypic differences to wild-type plants with respect to growth and development under the conditions applied. This indicated that MTA recycling is a nonessential function in Arabidopsis. Without MTA recycling, Met used for ethylene or polyamine synthesis ought to be provided through the primary Met synthetic pathway in the AtMTK knock-out mutant.
OsMTK transcript levels in the internode of nontreated intact deepwater rice plants were highest in differentiated tissues. During submergence, mRNA levels in the differentiation zone of the internode were down-regulated, whereas expression was largely unaltered in the growing region. Submergence results in elevated synthesis of ethylene in the growing region but not in the differentiation zone (Cohen and Kende, 1987 Omission of sulfur or iron from the nutrient solution for 2 weeks following treatment with complete medium for 3 weeks did not affect plant growth, whereas lack of nitrogen resulted in yellow leaves and stunted growth after 2 weeks. Irrespective of the physiological responses, OsMTK transcripts were up-regulated only when plants were subjected to sulfur deficiency. Nitrogen is a macroelement required for many of the essential compounds found in cells including amino acids. Despite the fact that nitrogen deficiency severely affected plant growth, expression of OsMTK genes, which are involved in regenerating Met, was not up-regulated under these conditions, indicating that OsMTK gene regulation is most tightly linked to sulfur metabolism.
Some graminaceous plants are known to produce phytosiderophores under iron-limiting conditions (Shojima et al., 1990 Identification of genes encoding the MTR kinase enzyme of the MTA cycle opened up the avenue to study the role of MTA recycling for plant growth and development. Regulation of MTR kinase genes clearly showed a link with sulfur metabolism. Future work will be aimed at studying the effect of MTA cycle knock out in Arabidopsis on sulfur-containing amino acid pools, as well as on the ability of the plants to synthesize ethylene or polyamines, both of which depend on Met as a substrate. It will also be of interest to understand how expression of different MTA cycle genes and their corresponding encoded enzyme activities are coordinated. Lastly, it will be exciting to learn how regulation of the MTA cycle is integrated in the general sulfur metabolic pathway. Identifying and characterizing genes of the MTA cycle is the first step toward these goals.
Plant Material
Seeds of deepwater rice (Oryza sativa L. cv Pin Gaew 56) were originally provided by the International Rice Research Institute (Los Bañjos, The Philippines). Rice plants were grown as described (Sauter, 1997
Wild-type seeds of the Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) ecotype Columbia-0 were obtained through GABI-KAT (Max-Planck Institut, Köln, Germany). Two independent Arabidopsis T-DNA insertion knock-out mutant lines were obtained from the Salk Institute. Line 532,926 carried an insertion in the 5' untranslated region of the putative AtMTK gene 120 nucleotides upstream of the start codon, whereas line 633,954 had an insertion in the last intron of the gene (Fig. 4). Arabidopsis T2 plants homozygous for the T-DNA insertion were identified by PCR and used for all subsequent experiments. To characterize Arabidopsis T-DNA insertion lines, a rapid genomic DNA isolation method was used (Weigel and Glazebrook, 2002 Unless stated otherwise, Arabidopsis seeds were sown on 1:1 sand:humus that was frozen at 80°C for a few hours to avoid insect contamination. Plants were watered regularly with tap water. Seeds were stratified at 4°C in the dark for 4 d and then transferred to a growth chamber under long-day conditions with 16 h of light (100 µE m2 s1) and 8 h of darkness at 22°C and 18°C, respectively.
Rice seeds were pregerminated as described (Sauter, 1997
Arabidopsis seeds were surface sterilized for 15 min in 1 mL of 0.5% (w/v) sodium hypochlorite. After brief centrifugation, seeds were resuspended in sterile autoclaved water. This washing step was repeated five times. Seeds were laid out using a brush under sterile conditions on square plates containing media of one of eleven different compositions solidified by 0.8% low EEO agar (Sigma-Aldrich, Taufkirchen, Germany). Complete medium contained 1.5% (w/v) Suc and 0.5x Murashige-Skoog salts (Murashige and Skoog, 1962
Partial submergence of deepwater rice plants was carried out for 0 h, 4 h, 8 h, 16 h, or 24 h as described by Lorbiecke and Sauter (1998)
Total RNA was extracted from rice tissues and used for northern-blot analysis (Sauter, 1997 Total RNA was isolated from leaves of T-DNA-tagged Arabidopsis lines 532,926 and 633,954 and from wild-type plants of ecotype Columbia 0 (obtained from the Max Planck Institute). Four micrograms of total RNA were used per RT-PCR assay (5' RACE kit; Invitrogen, Karlsruhe, Germany). For each line, two independent RT reactions were carried out with primer AtMTK-R3 to monitor the presence of a full-length mRNA or with primer AtMTK-R1 to detect the N-terminal 497 bp of the coding region. For PCR amplification, primers AtMTK-F3 and AtMTK-R3 or primers AtMTK-F3 and AtMTK-R1 were used (Table I; Fig. 4).
The DNA sequencing method used was based on the termination of chain extension developed by Sanger et al. (1977)
DNA and protein homologs of MTR kinase sequences were searched for in the available protein and nucleic acid databases with the BLAST algorithm (Altschul et al., 1997
A rice EST containing an open reading frame homologous to known bacterial MTR kinase genes was obtained from the Arizona Genomics Institute (OsJNEc 15D06, accession no. CB658835). The putative OsMTK1 cDNA was cloned into the pGEX-6P-1 expression vector (Amersham Biosciences) with primers OsMTK-F1 and OsMTK-R1 (Table I). OsMTK-F1 generated an EcoRI restriction site by mutating three nucleotides upstream of the start codon and the start codon itself (ATG, Met) to GAATTC. This resulted in replacement of the start Met by Phe. A NotI restriction site was generated two nucleotides downstream of the stop codon by using primer OsMTK-R1 (Table I). This construct was sequenced to verify correct cloning and introduced into the Escherichia coli host BL21. Overexpression, purification, and cleavage of GST-OsMTK1 were carried out according to the GST Gene Fusion System Manual (Amersham Biosciences). Overexpression was induced with IPTG. Several pGEX recombinants were identified, all of which expressed a fusion protein with a mass of 70 kD. GST-OsMTK1 was purified by Glutathione Sepharose 4B affinity chromatography (Amersham Biosciences). Purified fusion protein was cleaved with PreScission Protease (Amersham Biosciences), and recombinant OsMTK1 protein was again purified by passage over Glutathione Sepharose 4B. Recombinant OsMTK1 protein contained 8 additional amino acids (Gly-Pro-Leu-Gly-Ser-Pro-Glu-Phe) at the amino-terminal end and had a molecular mass of 50 kD.
14C-MTR was synthesized from [14C-methyl]AdoMet (Moravek, Brea, CA) in two steps. First a 1-mL volume containing 50 µCi [14C-methyl]AdoMet, pH 3, was hydrolyzed to 14C-MTA in a boiling water bath for 1 h (Schlenk, 1983
MTR kinase activity was assessed using a modification of the previously reported procedure (Cornell et al., 1996 Sequence data from this article have been deposited with the EMBL/GenBank data libraries under accession number AY593959.
We would like to thank Timo Staffel for excellent technical assistance. Receipt of two Arabidopsis T-DNA insertion mutants from the Salk Institute is gratefully acknowledged. Received September 17, 2004; returned for revision October 21, 2004; accepted October 21, 2004.
1 This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (grant no. SA 495/71 to M.S.). K.A.C. received support from U.S. Department of Agriculture (grant no. 0200047). Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.104.053587. * Corresponding author; e-mail msauter{at}bot.uni-kiel.de; fax 00494318804222.
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